Foreword
This
document sets out City of York Council’s Bus Service
Improvement Plan (BSIP) in response to the National Bus
Strategy. The BSIP sets out how York will continue its long
standing programme to improve bus services in York to encourage
greater use of the service – in support of the city’s
local transport and environmental policies, and to recover service
use to levels seen before the covid pandemic – indeed higher
than that.
The bus
has always been very important in York’s transport. Why
is this? There are many reasons.
Firstly,
bus services are important because they combat congestion - one of
the biggest destroyers of time and productivity in modern urban
economies. In York, pre-covid, the buses carried a lot of
trips – nearly 16 million in 2018/19, 4
million of those on park and ride. This was a growth of 60%
over the 2000 total of 10 million trips. Also, 8% of journeys to work
in York are on the bus, compared to 3% nationally. Because
the bus is an efficient user of limited roadspace (a double decker
bus is the length of 2 cars, but can carry up to 80 people) it
makes sense to support further use of the bus with the objective of
managing congestion in York.
Secondly,
bus services support York’s economy. Policies to grow
York’s economy require a flexible local labour market –
allowing employees to travel easily to a range of job
opportunities, and giving employers
access to a pool of labour spread over a wide area. The
University of York, York College and York St John University are
all on high frequency bus routes, and the city centre is at the
heart of many high frequency routes, making bus an important means
for people to access jobs, training opportunities, further and
higher education.
Bus
services also support York’s city centre. Research has
shown that 25% of people in the centre of York got there by
bus; meanwhile other
research has shown that bus
passengers are responsible for between 25% and 33% of expenditure
in city centres, with an average spend per trip of £54.
If these figures were applied to the number of visitor trips to
York each year (approximately 8 million), a spend of around
£100 million per year is implied, with spending by residents
of York, who use the bus to get into the city centre, additional to
this figure. As such,
improving bus services is essential to CYC’s wider ambitions
to develop the city centre and assist in its recovery from the
economic downturn bought by covid.
Effective
bus services are also a key component in the City Council’s
programmes to reduce poverty, disadvantage and social exclusion in
York. The original work by the Cabinet Office’s Social
Exclusion Unit made it clear that
availability of reliable and affordable public transport allows
people without access to cars to reach training, healthcare,
childcare, a range of job opportunities and simply allows people to
visit, and by visited by, their friends and relatives, and this
link is re-emphasised in the National Bus Strategy and
correspondence from Baroness Vere more recently. As such,
effective bus services can be key to promoting not just economic
growth, but also improving health and wellbeing and reducing mental
illness, particularly in a city like York, with a relatively low
rate of car ownership.
Furthermore, bus services have a key role in complementing
York’s policies to encourage walking and cycling.
Studies of travel behaviour have shown that
people are more likely to adopt walking and cycling as their main
means of getting around if a good bus service is also available
– even if they only use it when the weather is poor or they
have something heavy to carry. In this way, this BSIP is
complementary to, not in tension with, York’s investment in
active travel through the Active Travel Fund and the city’s
own walking and cycling funding, which is extensive.
Finally,
good public transport is a key ingredient in making a city an
attractive place to live and is important in
forming visitors’ first impressions of York. On the
basis that the first time visitor of today might be the regular
visitor, resident or even investor in the York of tomorrow, the
public transport network should be developed to give a consistently
good impression of the city – through its being punctual,
attractive and pleasant to use.
Consequently, York sees supporting its bus services as
essential, agreeing with the imperative to improve services set out
in the National Bus Strategy. However, that is not to say bus
services in York are currently perfect, and this document presents
substantial analysis identifying shortcomings where there is scope
to improve the network. Congestion across York slows down
journeys and makes them unreliable. The growth aspirations
set out in York’s draft Local Plan will need an effective bus
service – we need to make sure that happens.
So this
document sets out how City of York Council will work with bus
operators and community stakeholders to develop bus services in
York – address current shortfalls, and for the future build a
strong and stable network to act as a glue binding together much of
York’s social and economic fabric; in the process supporting
the principles set out in the National Bus Strategy.
1
Introduction
1.1
This document sets out a Bus
Service Improvement Plan (BSIP) for York. The city’s
bus network is currently delivered by City of York Council, bus
operators and community stakeholders working together through a
voluntary quality bus partnership which has worked hard to improve
services for over 20 years. This document sets out the
development of the partnership and network to meet the challenges
set down in the National Bus Strategy (NBS).
1.2
In the partnership, the city
council provide and manage the roads which bus services use, and
the bus stops and shelters used by passengers. The bus
operators provide the bus services themselves – the vehicles
and their drivers. So whilst the bus operators are
accountable for the services running to time, they can only do that
if the roads are managed effectively by the local authority.
There are also a number of elements delivered in partnership, such
as the bus timetables in the city, which are produced by the
council but financed by the operators. This document will set
out how the existing arrangements can be transitioned to a Enhanced
Partnership model, as set out in the NBS.
1.3
We recognise, then, that
because many elements, controlled by different parties, come
together to provide a “good” bus service, there is a
need to respond to the challenge of NBS by setting out a
co-ordinated plan for the development of York’s bus network,
so that the city council can identify its priorities in seeking
capital funding; so that the bus operators can have the confidence
to invest in improving services in York and so that it is clear who
is responsible for each attribute of the bus service, and to
articulate our network development funding “ask” to the
DfT. Our ask is informed by data, consultation we
have undertaken this Summer informing a refresh of York’s
Local Transport Plan discussion with York’s bus operators and
input from other groups, including the York Bus Forum and York
Civic Trust’s Transport Advisory Group.
1.4
This BSIP sets out the measures
that the partners will work together to deliver over the next 3
years – a period aligned with the DfT’s commitment of
£3bn expenditure to improve local bus services up to the
2024/25 year, and then further investment beyond 2025. As
such, this document, and the “daughter” documents and
evidence base in its appendices will be updated annually to reflect
York, and its bus network’s, development and discharge the
duty on LTAs to publish an annual update of their
BSIPs.
1.5
The BSIP is split into a number
of thematic sections. Each section comprises:
§ An analysis of the current
situation
§ A statement of commitments made by CYC,
the bus operators, or other parties, to address identified
shortcomings outwith (and often in advance of the publication of)
the National Bus Strategy
§ A statement of the ask we are making to
DfT to develop York’s bus network to the standard set out in
NBS.
1.6
The effect of the covid
pandemic is still playing out on bus services. At the time of
writing, service use in York has returned to between 65% and 80% of
pre-covid volumes, with significant differences between services
and markets. The commute market remains depressed, whilst the
leisure and visitor market is performing well. There are
other significant uncertainties in the short to medium term around
availability of driving staff. This BSIP has needed to bear
these factors in mind in making its commitments and asks.
Whislt it presents a framework for developing bus services, this is
presented in outline to maintain flexibility in delivery and take
account of uncertainty as the BSIP measures are
implemented.
1.7
Consequently, where we have
made asks of the DfT these have been prioritised into one or more
of the following categories:
§ Bus Recovery from covid and its
consequences
§ Stabilisation of the network in the medium
term
§ Reduce social exclusion (by improving the
network)
§ Improving the offer for
customers
1.8
This prioritization is
reflected in the rankings given to measures in the BSIP spreadsheet
requested by DfT.
2
Description of the York bus
network
2.1
A map of York, and one of its
bus network, can be found in the Evidence Base provided alongside
this document.
2.2
York’s bus network
primarily serves York City, where two thirds of all trips on the
network both begin and end. However, the network has a number
of unusual characteristics.
2.3
Firstly, because York sits in
the middle of predominantly rural hinterland, the city is at the
terminating end of a large number of routes feeding into the
city. These routes tend not to be entirely rural in character
– but operate to other regionally important towns and cities
(for example, Hull, Leeds, Scarborough, Selby and Harrogate)
through the rural area around York. Because of this, an
unusually large number of operators (seven) provide local services
in York. The city’s largest operator (First York)
operates almost entirely within the city boundary. However,
nearly all corridors in York feature services provided by more than
one operator. This has the implication that co-ordinating the
softer parts of the bus service offer – roadside display
timetables and multi-operator ticketing – is particularly
important in York. This has been done for the last 20 years
through the York Quality Bus Partnership.
2.4
A second implication of the
large number of operators in York is that the city’s largest
operator, First York, is relatively small, and does not have the
same purview across the network as a whole that an operator who
provided 90% of the mileage in an area would enjoy, and there is
very little of the York network where FirstYork is the only
operator providing services. However, this does mean that
there is significant competition for tenders in York and on the
road competition has acted to keep fare levels on fully deregulated
services in check.
2.5
The city also has an
established park and ride network, comprising six sites serving the
city’s principal approach roads. This service, which
carries 25% of passengers in York, is operated under a licence
agreement to CYC by FirstYork. Under this, FirstYork pay CYC
a fee for operating the service and, in return, CYC contractually
specify aspects of the service, including vehicle specifications,
fare levels, routes and frequencies. This arrangement has
allowed CYC, and FirstYork, to take advantage of a number of rounds
of green bus funding, resulting in 5 of the 6 park and ride
services being operated using fully electric vehicles – one
of the largest fleets of electric buses outside London. The
current park and ride contract comes to an end in 2024.
2.6
A further service, to York
University, is controlled through an agreement with the University,
and around 15% of bus mileage in York is operated through
conventional subsidised tenders.
2.7
As such, only around 50% of bus
journeys in York take place on a fully deregulated bus service
which is entirely free of specification of aspects of the service
by CYC or other organisations such as York
University.
2.8
In addition, central York is
covered by a Clean Air Zone (CAZ), with bus operators required to
use buses of Euro VI or better for any vehicle which operates more
than 5 times a day into the zone. Finance to do this was
provided by CYC, although many operators upgraded their vehicles
through their commercial fleet replacement policies. For park
and ride services and tendered services, use of Euro VI, or
electric, buses was a tender condition.
2.9
These initiatives have fostered
much collaborative working between CYC and York’s bus
operators, and we look to develop this in our BSIP and Enhanced
Partnership.
2.10
York is also about to enter a
period of great change and development. The city’s
draft Local Plan envisages an increase in the city’s
population of around 25%. There are a number of major
projects taking place, particularly:
§ York Central – a mixed development
on brownfield land on the edge of York city centre, comprising up
to 100,000m2 of office space and 2,500 homes. This
development’s planning conditions and Section 106 agreement
include three new stretches of bus lane, substantial contributions
to new bus services and green travel plan initiatives;
§ A rebuilding of the area in front of York
Station, to improve its amenity of for pedestrians, cyclists and
visitors to the city, as well as providing an improved bus
interchange with better facilities for passengers, substantially
more bus stops and the opportunity to turn buses, allow some bus
layover and more effectively separate local buses from rail
replacement services and special event coaches, so that problems on
the rail network do not adversely effect local buses;
§ The Castle Gateway project in the south
eastern quadrant of York city centre, which will improve the bus
interchanges in this area.
2.11
There are also improvements
being made to the two strategic roads around York – the A1237
northern ring road, which is being dualled for approximately half
its length, and the A64 southern bypass, which is being improved
east of York. The upgrades of these two routes give scope for
reassignment of significant volumes of traffic away from York city
centre, with resultant reductions in traffic volumes in the city
centre and improvements to bus services in the city
centre.
2.12
The Local Plan also includes a
number of large developments on the outside of York, with the three
largest having an ambitious target for 15% mode share to bus for
commute trips. It is anticipated that this will be provided
through new, high quality dedicated services to the
developments.
3
Where are we now and where do
we want to be?
Where we
are now
3.1
The current York bus network is
the product of many things, but particularly:
§ A 30 year history of investment in bus
services in York, resulting in the ring of 6 park and ride sites,
all supported, to some extent, by bus priority lanes;
§ A 20 year old voluntary Quality Bus
Partnership, which has adapted and changed with circumstances, most
recently providing a platform for the sudden and widespread changes
to the bus network bought by the covid pandemic
§ From approximately 10 years ago, a more
joined up approach to service provision which has seen the Council
and operators come together to jointly fund various aspects of the
bus network, including traffic management, quality surveys,
provision of roadside diplay timetables and other passenger
information; and creation of a multi-operator ticket.
Creation of an enhanced partnership is an opportunity to continue
and develop this work.
3.2
As such, bus services in York
have seen some success over the last 10 years, with significant
pre-covid increases in passenger numbers (see figure 3.1), such
that the last complete pre-covid year (2018/19) had passenger
numbers 12% above volumes seen 7 years before. In comparison,
for the Yorkshire and Humber Region, bus passenger numbers fell by
10% over the same period.
Figure
3.1: Bus patronage in York
3.3
The increase seen in Figure 3.1
came after a more general increase in patronage over the years
preceeding 2012/13. An estimate of pre-deregulation bus
passenger numbers in York is difficult to come by, but there were
approximately 10 million bus journeys in 2000, compared to the peak
in 2017/18 of 16.3 million, an increase of nearly two-thirds in a
17 year period, something which is relatively unusual, although not
unknown.
3.4
By the 2017/18 year York had
one of the highest bus trip rates per head for local authorities in
England (ranked at 11 of 80 authorities). However, it
is not enough to look at a rising passenger trend and high trip
rate and conclude that is enough. There was a small fall in
passenger numbers between 2017/18 and 2018/19, with a further fall
(although this was at least partly related to the covid trip
suppression in March 2020) in 2019/20. In the 2020/21 year,
which was entirely effected by covid and lockdowns, bus patronage
in York was approximately 25% of the 2019/20 year. At the
time of writing patronage has recovered to between 65% and 80% of
pre-covid volumes, varying from service to service.
Passenger Satisfaction
3.5
The York QBP has bought into
the Transport Focus Bus Passenger surveys every year since 2013,
giving us a complete dataset on passenger satisfaction (the figure
presented for 2012 is based on a separate, but similar, exercise
undertaken in-house, which is felt to be comparable) (see figure
3.3). The passenger satisfaction ratings peaked in the 2014
(in which year we had the highest satisfaction of anywhere surveyed
by Transport Focus in England), remaining above 90% until the 2018
survey, but falling more (to 86%) in the 2019 survey. It is
likely that some of these changes in passenger satisfaction are
related to the loss of passengers since 2018, and further
interrogation of the data (see Evidence Base) demonstrates a
particular reduction in satisfaction around perceptions of vehicle
quality and service punctuality, which have informed the proposals
we make in this document under the heading of Improving the
offer to customers.
Figure
3.2: Overall Passenger Satisfaction with bus services in
York
3.6
In 2021 we commenced work on
York’s fourth Local Transport Plan. Survey work
undertaken preparing the evidence base for the Plan suggests that
members of the public in York (sample size = approx. 1400) saw
improvements to frequency, reliability, bus network extent, cheaper
fares, better ticketing and better/ electric vehicles as being
particularly critical to encouraging greater bus use. In a
separate question residents were asked what they may do to travel
more sustainably around York, with 17% saying they wanted to use
public transport more (on top of 55% who said they were already
using it). This was the second most likely behavior change in
the city, after converting to an electrical vehicle. It
emphasizes the point that an effective bus service in York is
essential to achieving large scale beneficial change in
peoples’ travel behavior.
Figure
3.4: Consultation on Bus Service Improvements (2021 LTP4
consultation). “What change would make you most likely
to use the bus service more?”
3.7
Notable in the data (see the
Evidence Base published alongside this document) is that it paints
a picture of York as a city where there is already a high level of
public transport use – nearly two-thirds of the residents who responded to
the survey said they used the bus at least a bit. This has
the implication that most residents of the city have a basic
understanding of the network: where the routes go, their frequency
and fares. The bus network is not a “closed”
system to them, although making it more attractive would make them
more likely to use it more. It also has the implication that
many of York’s bus users are car available – the right
offer would lead to them using the bus for a greater proportion of
their trip making. This BSIP intends to build on that –
with the intention of increasing use rates so that the person who
uses the bus once a month begins to use it once a week, ideally
replacing a car trip. The person who uses the service once a
week might start to use it three or four times – because the
service is more attractive. We can also see, from figure 3.3,
that over two-thirds of residents see many of the measures set out
in this BSIP as likely to encourage them to use the bus more,
including a detailed travel behavior change section of the
document.
Targets:
growth and passenger satisfaction
3.8
Below we set out a series of
targets.
3.9
First of all, we wish to use
this BSIP as our framework to recover our bus network back to
pre-covid levels of use. As said earlier, at the time of
writing (late September 2021) we are seeing a patronage recovery of
65%-80%, varying from service to service, although there are other
challenges – particularly the availability of drivers.
We wish to see a recovery to over 90% of pre-pandemic patronage
levels by April 2022. By April 2025 we are setting a
target of growth to 20 million passenger trips a year – a 25%
increase on the peak seen in 2017/18. However, we believe
that this is achievable through the policies set out in this
document because they accord to the local priorities identified
through the Local Transport Plan consultation.
3.10
Separately we are setting a
target for overall passenger satisfaction, as measured by Transport
Focus’s surveys, of 95%, this being 2% higher than the
previous maximum satisfaction seen in York, in 2014, but 9% higher
than the last set of surveys in 2019. Again, we think this is
achievable, if challenging, based on the network improvements which
will flow from the policies and interventions set out in this
document.
4
Making the buses run on time
– tackling slow journeys, delays and
unreliability
Introduction
4.1
69% of our questionnaire
respondents said that more reliable bus services would encourage
their use of buses in the city. Poor perceptions of
punctuality can also be seen in the data collected about passenger
satisfaction in York by Transport Focus. We have worked with
First York to identify the most congested locations on York’s
bus network in assembling the data behind this BSIP. The
analysis produced by First York can be seen in the Evidence Base
for this document.
Background
4.2
As the National Bus Strategy
sets out, poor punctuality of services is a serious problem for
passengers and bus operators alike and suppresses use of the
network. In parts of York congested roads slow services down,
making them less attractive, and increase operating costs, because
more buses are required to operate a given service as end to end
journey time increases. Furthermore, buses stuck in traffic
are, when diesel, usually still emitting pollution and using
carbon, so there is an important relationship between measures to
cut congestion and CYC’s work to improve air quality and
reduce carbon emissions across York. This was
reinforced to us during Lockdown, when it was possible to operate
some routes in York with far fewer buses, but at the same
frequencies as normal, because lower traffic volumes meant end to
end journey times were much shorter.
4.3
Consistently slow journeys are
one problem, but what is worse is inconsistent journey times.
As bus services operate to a timetable, a stage of a bus journey
which takes 5 minutes one day, but 10 the next is a significant
operating problem. The service would need to either be timed
to be late on the “10 minute” day, or to wait time
somewhere on the “5 minute” day. Both options are
frustrating for passengers – and bring wider problems.
If the bus has to wait somewhere, kerb space must be provided for
it to do that, which is a problem in a city like York where waiting
space for buses is in very short supply in the city
centre.
4.4
In this section we consider how
the BSIP will improve service speeds and
punctuality.
How does York perform now?
Figure 4.1: Bus Punctuality in York
4.5
As can be seen from Figure 4.1,
punctuality of less-frequent bus services in York is generally
between 80% and 90%, a significant improvement compared to earlier
years – for example, in 2007/8 only 47% of less-frequent
services were assessed to be on time. This change is the
product of much work by York’s QBP, through its Performance
Group, which focuses on service reliability.
4.6
These figures compare well
against other urban areas, particularly other historic towns and
cities with similarly constrained and congested road
networks. Nonetheless,
there remains room for improvement - with other towns and cities,
for example Nottingham, able to demonstrate higher still levels of
timetable adherence. Furthermore, whilst timetables are
adhered to, we want to make bus services as fast and competitive as
we can. Some timetables now undoubtedly include
“padding” time to counter inconsistent journey times on
some roads in York, and we are seeking to eliminate this, as much
as possible, through the measures set out in this
document.
Targets: punctuality
4.7
Consequently, our targets for
2024/5, in relation to bus punctuality in York are:
§ 90% of less frequent services will be
punctual
§ Excess wait time for frequent services
(not reported here) will be no more than 45 seconds.
Proposed Measures: punctuality
4.8
In relation to bus service
punctuality, we have a number of objectives,
specifically:
§ To continue to improve punctuality of
services in York
§ To improve the end to end journey speed of
existing bus services in York
§ To ensure that any new bus services are
punctual and have journey times which are competitive with those by
car.
4.9
There are six strands to
our strategy, these are:
§ Maintaining our assets to get the best use
of our existing highways capacity
§ Actively managing traffic to keep buses
running to time
§ Tackling bottlenecks
§ Improving whole corridors to make bus
services faster
§ Managing services in the city
centre
§ Other strategies which can reduce bus
journey times (for example, ticketing strategies which minimize
boarding times).
4.10
These are explained
below.
Making the most of what we have already:
maintaining our assets
4.11
It’s obvious really, but
measures which improve traffic flow also improve the flow and
reliability of bus services. Whilst there are innumerable
products and techniques available to manage traffic effectively,
there is a very important role in maximising the use of the many
systems York already has installed. As such, City of York
Council will commit to maintaining the equipment it already has
installed in the city to manage traffic. These
include:
§ Extensive bus priorities on many key
radials – particularly supporting inbo0und
movements;
§ An Urban Traffic Control (UTC) system
covering much of the city. This system gathers data about the
amount of traffic on key roads in York and sets the traffic lights
accordingly to minimise delays;
§ CCTV cameras covering key junctions across
York, including many on the inner ring road, key road junctions on
the city’s principal routes, and junctions with major roads
such as the A64(T)
§ Variable Message Signs (VMS) on
York’s principal roads which can be used to direct traffic if
necessary (for example, away from a road traffic accident) and real
time screens at bus stops which can be used to relay messages to
passengers
§ Use of apps, twitter etc to relay
information to bus passengers and road users in real
time
§ More recently, CYC has developed a
“real time model” for assessing traffic flows in York
and optimising signals to minimize congestion.
This takes data from a
number of sources (for example, mobile phone signals), assessing
traffic flows and speeds. We are exploring how this model can
be used to give signals based bus priority in the
future.
4.12
At the time of writing much
work is in progress on this front, including resurfacing many of
the major junctions around York and replacing the vehicle counting
loops installed in the road surface which send data to the UTC,
often with cameras able to identify and count different types of
vehicle. The City Council is also refurbishing the VMS signs
around the city and adding to the number of sites where traffic
cameras are installed.
4.13
BSIP Commitment
R1: City of York
Council will commit to continuing this work with the intention of
using best endeavours and whatever funding is available to ensure
all existing systems in the city are kept in good working order,
and to demonstrate their value in improving traffic flows in
York.
4.14
BSIP Commitment
R2: City of York
Council will use its traffic real time model to provide signals
based bus priorities. The model will identify late running
buses and prioritise them at junctions, using the methodology which
is already proven in South Yorkshire. This can be used,
particularly, to tackle inconsistent journey times.
Active management of traffic
4.15
The Traffic Control Centre in
the council’s offices has an important role in managing
traffic flows in York to minimise disruption day to day, and inform
bus passengers (and other road users) of any delays. Since
2013 “Network Monitoring Officers”, initially funded by
York’s Better Bus Area Fund, but more recently funded
voluntarily by York’s bus operators, have been on duty 12
hours a day, Monday to Saturday, monitoring traffic flows and
adjusting traffic signals to reduce congestion and delay to bus
users. They are also a key line of communication with bus
operators – advising them of delays and any incidents which
may cause late running. The Network Monitoring Officers
can:
§ Change traffic lights to reduce the length
of a traffic jam;
§ Send messages to the real time screens and
variable message signs around York to advise bus passengers and
road users of any delays;
§ Co-ordinate action between operators to
overcome problems on street.
4.16
They also have an important
role managing traffic during York’s many festivals and
special events – for example, they are extremely important in
co-ordinating the city council and bus operators during
York’s race meetings and festivals, and they take a leading
role in planning bus services around roadworks in the
city.
4.17
The city council has also,
through the Better Bus Area Fund, employed two “Bus
Wardens” who act as the bus network’s “boots on
the ground”. The Wardens undertake many important
functions, including:
§ Keeping bus routes, bus lanes and bus
stops clear of obstructions – for example, by moving vehicles
on which are parked (including for loading) in such a way that they
obstruct buses, or by assisting whenever a highway is blocked
– for example by utilities work, maintenance work or by an
accident;
§ Maintaining many of the bus stops,
shelters and bus timetables around the city;
§ Inspecting and sorting out problems which
are reported about the bus network – for example, vegetation
which obscures bus stops;
§ Assisting passengers during special events
– during one-off major events, or for regular special events,
such as race meetings or the university open days;
§ Assisting passengers from day to day with
enquiries;
§ Collecting information about persistent
causes of delay (for example, poorly phased traffic signals,
loading vehicle obstructions) so that rectification action can take
place.
4.18
This work is co-ordinated
through the “Performance Group” of the Quality Bus
Partnership. This group meets monthly and discusses upcoming
special events and major roadworks. It also reviews a monthly
performance indicator (see Evidence Base) to consider performance
across York’s bus network as a whole and agree any action
required to remedy a dip in punctuality. This indicator is
published on the CYC website every month.
4.19
Ask R1:
£150k pa for three years
to continue to fund the two Network Monitoring Officers and Bus
Wardens, as set out above. After the three year period, if
successful, funding for these posts would revert to the
operators. We are requesting this to help the network
recover from the covid pandemic as this funding would provide
operator relief from these charges
4.20
Commitment
R3: is that the
Performance Group of the QBP will take an important role in
planning for special events, including sports events and
festivals. This will include making decisions on warden and
NMO cover for these events – and provision of other staff by
operators or CYC.
4.21
Commitment
R4:the Performance
Group will continue to review performance on a monthly basis,
publish its punctuality indicator, and agree appropriate
mitigations as required.
Tackling hotspots and bottlenecks
4.22
Bus service reliability suffers
due to bottlenecks on the network. Figure 4.2 shows delayed
representation of bus delays in the centre of York, identified as
part of the work preparing this BSIP. A key
challenge for the BSIP is to work to identify, and where possible,
eliminate the various bottlenecks on thei network. This work
will be taken forward by the York Enhance Partnership, and schemes
will be advised in the 2022 update to the BSIP.
Figure 4.2 Bus Delays in central York (by
permission, FirstYork)
4.23
We know from previous
interventions that small scale interventions – which might
change the shape of a yellow box junction to reduce exit-blocking,
retime a set of signals, make small changes to junction geometry or
provide bus boarders – are very good value for money and can,
cumulatively, have a large beneficial impact on bus journey times
and reliability.
4.24
Commitment R6:
City of York Council will
continue to work with the bus operators to develop a series of
small schemes to, where practicable, tackle bottlenecks. This
will be financed through an annual capital “fund of
£50,000 pa for small schemes, or targeted capital spend for
larger schemes, which may require preparation of a business case.
The Performance Group and Better Bus Area Groups of the
Quality Bus Partnership will be instrumental in prioritizing the
schemes for action. Ask R2: CYC request that the DfT
match the £50,000 small measures fund with a further
£50,000 pa which can be used to tackle small scale
sources of unreliability on York’s bus network, or make the
case for larger scale interventions. This is requested to
help stabilise the bus network int eh medium term.
4.25
Commitment
R7:CYC will work
with developers to use S106 settlements to fund and deliver
localized bus priority schemes where these are needed to offset the
impact of development related traffic. We already have a
significant programme of work being progressed this way –
particularly connected with the York Central site, but this
approach will be applied to other development sites as they come
forward.
4.26
Whole corridor measures: Often, a series of junctions along a corridor will
conspire to delay bus services seriously, because a service will
accumulate delay at each junction, leading to a very large
cumulative delay over the whole corridor. In these instances
it is appropriate to look not just at individual bottlenecks, but
whether there is scope for measures to improve services along the
corridor as a whole – an approach we have recently taken on
ther A1036 Tadcaster Road to the west of York. Such measures
might be bus lanes, co-ordination of signals or schemes to reduce
traffic volumes on a particular route (for example, through access
restrictions, changes to signs to direct traffic away from the
route or measures to encourage motorists to travel in a different
way – for example the “Travel behaviour change”
projects being undertaken by York’s I-Travel sustainable
transport behavior team[14]). Obviously,
there is also scope to reduce cumulative delays through a series of
stand-alone measures at individual junctions on the
corridor.
4.27
In some cases work will need to
take place to improve conditions for bus services in advance of
extra traffic from new residential or employment development using
a route. In these instances, there may also be a need to
develop bus priority measures to ensure a competitive public
transport service is provided to the new development.
4.28
CYC’s planning team has
been working alongside developers in York, and a programme of
Section 106 funded bus priorities has been developed, in particular
measures on the A59/ Water End/ Leeman Road corridor to provide
reliable services to the York Central development. We are
currently assessing the impact of additional traffic on two key
radial corridors in the city – Wigginton Road and Fulford
Road – to assess the potential for bus priorities on these
corridors using micro-simulation models. This work, which
predates BSIP preparation, is being funded from CYC’s
transport capital programme. We are working alongside West
Yorkshire Combined Authority to deliver a Transforming Cities Fund
project to improve bus services on the Tadcaster Road
corridor.
4.29
Commitment
R8: The
Performance Group of the Quality Bus Partnership will work to
identify and prioritise routes requiring “whole
corridor” measures. These will be financed through a
variety of vehicles, including City of York Council’s Capital
Programme, the DfT BSIP support funding and other funds as they
become available. The CYC’s transport scheme
development funding will be used to make the case for bidding for
funds to make larger interventions.
4.30
Commitment
R9: City of York
Council will work with developers through the Local Plan to upgrade
corridors to ensure that new developments have bus services with
journey times that are competitive with the private car.
Measures will be funded through developer contributions (either
Section 106 contributions or, if appropriate, tariffs or Community
Infrastructure Levies (CIF)). Bus operators will have an
important advisory role in these negotiations. This is
discussed at more length in the section of this document which sets
out policy in relation to the Local Plan development of
York.
4.31
Ask R3: City of York Council request an
indiciative fund of £15m to provide radial bus priority
measures on corridors where these are not currently available/
improvements to existing radial bus priority provision or delivery
of high quality services to the sites identified in the Local
Plan. The deployment of these funds is contingent on a number
of studies which are currently underway (for example, looking at
bus routing in central York and on key radials such as Wigginton
Road, Tadcaster Road and the A19 Fulford Road and for sustainable
transport access to the larger sites allocated in the Local Plan
(see Section 13)). A detailed programme will be advised in
the BSIP published in 2022, so the funding ask set out here is an
indication with specific information to be advised later –
following technical studies and publication of York’s new
Local Transport Plan in 2022. This measure is required to
improve the customer offer for buses.
The
city centre
4.32
94% of the area inside the
York’s city walls is a conservation area. The character
and fabric of the city have been preserved through retention of
York’s historic road network with relatively few concessions
to motorised traffic, when considered alongside the 1960s inner
ring roads constructed in many other historic towns and
cities. However, although this means the city centre’s
character is intact, it imposes constraints on the easy operation
of bus services. As nearly all of York’s bus services
either serve or pass through the city centre, the effective
management of traffic there has a bearing on the operation of the
whole of the bus network. Consultation with adjacent
authorities has also shown that the effective operation of York
city centre for buses is key for reliable provision of bus services
in North and East Yorkshire.
A city centre bus priority route
4.33
Although there are short
stretches of bus/ taxi only streets in the centre of York there is
currently no complete bus priority spine route all the way through
York city centre. Commitment C5 is that bus operators
will work with City of York Council to consider the feasibility of
such a route and will work to make the necessary financial case for
delivering the route if a positive business case can be made for
the intervention once its full impacts are assessed. Progress
on this aspect of the BSIP will be advised in the 2022 BSIP update,
following a study commissioned by CYC, as part of the LTP process,
in late 2021. Costs of delivery are assumed to be within the
£15m block for whole corridor measures as advised
above.
Other reliability measures
4.34
Complementary measures to
improve reliability, by reducing boarding times by changing
ticketing systems, or reducing traffic volumes through behavior
change campaigns, are discussed in sections 6 and 11 of this
document.
5
Greening the bus
fleet
5.1
58% of respondents to the York
Local Transport Plan consultation said that better quality/
electric buses would encourage them to use public transport
more. Ageing vehicles and deteriorating fleet quality are
also thought to be one of the reasons why York has seen recent
falls in passenger satisfaction with bus services, something that
is born out by the data collected by Transport Focus –
although the introduction of many Euro VI buses to support
York’s Clean Air Zone during 2020 has reduced the average age
of the fleet in the city considerably.
5.2
Air quality in York can be poor
(itself a function of the city’s low-lying location,
protection from winds by surrounding hills and several
“canyon” locations in the city centre with high
buildings on both sides of narrow roads), CYC and bus
operators have worked hard to
reduce use of pre-Euro VI diesel buses in York, supporting the City
Council’s Air Quality Action Plan. Measures enacted so
far have included introduction of:
§ 33 electric buses bought into use on
York’s park and ride service between 2014 and 2020, the
second largest fleet of electric buses outside London
§ Conversion of all diesel buses entering
central York more than 5 times a day to Euro VI, to deliver a Clean
Air Zone in central York. This measure was principally funded
by CYC (£1.6m), although operators replaced some buses
commercially through pre-determined fleet renewal.
5.3
First have also invested in a
new sub-station in their depot, giving them the ability to charge
up to 50 electric buses at once. Northern PowerGrid have
committed to upgrading the substation which feeds First’s
depot, which would allow charging of First’s entire
fleet.
5.4
A bid to the DfT’s ZEBRA
fund was accepted in July 2021. If successful this will
finance replacement of 42 diesel buses with electric buses and
result in around 50% of the bus mileage in York, including the
entire park and ride network, to be operated
electrically.
5.5
Our BSIP target is
to:
§ Convert all bus services operating
predominantly in the York urban area to electric vehicles by
2024/25
§ To convert all inter-urban and rural
services to Euro VI diesel by 2024/25 (if it not practical to
electrify the routes).
The action plan for continuing this work
is:
§ Commitment E1 is that CYC and the bus operators agree to
recognise the importance of improving air quality across York, both
by encouraging transfer from car trips to bus trips and through
improving emissions from bus services.
§ Commitment E2 is that CYC has a key role in
facilitating/ co-ordinating operators’ responses to the
various Government grants directed at reducing emissions from
public transport. CYC pledges to maintain equality of
opportunity for bidding, although the council will obviously target
activities towards greatest gain for York.
§ Commitment E3 is that CYC will use the services it
specifies as a mechanism to encourage take up of vehicles with
lower emission levels.
§ Ask E1
is that DfT
fund conversion of the remainder of the York bus fleet to electric
power between now and 2025. This would require an investment
of approximately £12m to cover 60 buses and associated
infrastructure. The current ZEBRA bid is for £9m
covering 44 buses. If this bid is unsuccessful then we would
wish to increase our electric bus ask to £21m. This
measure is to (a) stabilize the network in the medium term (b)
improve the customer offer.
6
Fares and
ticketing
Introduction
6.1
68% of respondents to our
survey said that cheaper bus fares would encourage them to use
public transport more; and 60% said that more flexible ticketing
would encourage use. These two figures together, particularly
the second, which is perhaps less intuitive and betrays
York’s large number of operators, suggest that fares and
ticketing reform will be important to meeting the patronage growth
targets set out in this BSIP.
6.2
Fares and ticketing for public
transport is in a period of rapid change. Traditional cash
fares are being replaced by new ways of paying for tickets, such as
smartcards, mobile phone based payment and payment direct from
debit and credit cards, a process which has been accelerated by
covid-driven initiatives to reduce cash handling. City of
York Council welcomes the ticketing initiatives set out in the
National Bus Strategy.
Current situation
6.3
York already has a
multi-operator ticket – “All York”.
Launched in 2014, it had achieved sales of approximately
£250k a year by 2019. There is, however, some way to go
before the ticket meets the requirements of multi-operator tickets
– available with no premium over single operator tickets
– as set out in the National Bus Strategy. Furthermore,
whilst the ticket is available on paper and on smartcard, it is not
available as an app based prioduct or for purchase off the
bus. Bus-Rail integrated tickets are available through
PlusBus tickets, although there are no York specific products (for
example, allowing onward travel to York University from the Railway
Station). As commented earlier, York is at the centre of a
large rural hinterland. There are many bus trips which begin
in this area, but out of the City of York Council area, and require
a change of bus to reach a destination in York (e.g. a passenger
might travel from Leeds on a CityZap service, then travel on to
York University using a First service). Consultation with
user groups and adjacent local authorities has outlined that many
such journeys, requiring two tickets, are expensive and hence not
attractive. Our consultation with East Riding of Yorkshire
Council and North Yorkshire County Council – as well as the
companies who operate buses into York from these areas, revealed
that they saw this as a priority for York’s BSIP.
6.4
An important consideration is
also that, by providing a mutli-operator ticket which carries no
price premium in an area with many corridors used by more than one
bus operator, effective frequency can be substantially increased
for many journeys in the city – because passengers will be
able to get on the first bus to arrive. As such this will
drive patronage up by reducing wait times, irrespective of fare
levels.
6.5
We also see it as a priority to
improve ticketing options for younger people. At the moment
there is inconsistency between operators in York in what their
young peoples’ offer is, and we are aware of the more general
work done by Transport Focus setting out how younger people find
the cost of bus tickets to be a significant cause of social
exclusion, erecting barriers to them being able to access to
training opportunities in particular. Below we propose a
significant reform of tickets for younger people in
York.
Our vision and targets
6.6
The Quality Bus Partnership
believe that there is potential to unlock significant demand for
buses in York through a thorough re-engineering of the ticketing
offer in the city. In particular, we set the targets
of:
§ Creating a multi-operator ticket which
does not have a premium over operators single/ return fare products
and makes use of tap on-tap off to cap daily costs for users,
irrespective of the number of times they travel. This will
reduce ticket costs and increase, on some corridors significantly,
effective frequency by allowing passengers to get on the first bus
to arrive at their stop.
§ Creating tickets which enable movement by
bus by young people.
§ Creating a range of tickets to make it
easier to undertake multi-modal (through links with the rail
network) and cross boundary travel into or out of York.
6.7
Our pre-existing commitments to
deliver the improvements to ticketing are set out
below:
§ Commitment T1: develop an app-based AllYork ticket
§ Commitment T2: develop All York tickets for purchase off
the bus (including monthly and annual products). These can be
marketed through employers and to residents of new property
developments
§ Commitment T3: review the range and pricing of AllYork
ticketing products, through the Enhanced Partnership’s
ticketing group,to ensure that they are attractive and can
contribute fully to delivering York’s transport
policies. A particular focus of this work will be to develop
a ticket which carries no price premium over single operator
tickets and gives bus passengers access to any service in York on
an equal footing
§ Commitment T4: develop a smart AllYork carnet of journeys
ticket product, which can be used alongside fare capping
§ Commitment T5: is that the QBP will support and promote PlusBus
and work with train operating companies to develop local rail/ bus
products. This will include rail add on tickets to large trip
attractors and special events in York, and use of the park and ride
to access rail services.
§ Commitment T6 is that we will work with officers in
North, East and West Yorkshire to develop a range of tickets to
incentivize onward travel in York as an attractively priced add-on
to inter-urban tickets.
§ Commitment T7 is to investigate other opportunities for
sales of bus tickets to access York’s many festivals and
special events. Again, this will be developed through the
QBP’s Marketing Group.
§ Commitment
T8 is that CYC will provide finance to allow tap-on-tap-off
credit card use on all the city’s buses. This will be
made easy to operate in York because all seven operators in the
city use compatible Ticketer machines, a situation made possible by
earlier investment by CYC in ticketing platforms.
6.8
We used this document to make
two funding asks in relation to this workstream:
§ Ask T1 is for support for work to investigate how the new
multi-operator/ capped fare/ integrated tickets can be introduced
and priced. We are requesting funding of £50,000 pa to
support a commercial officer to develop the ticket products for
three years, plus a further £100,000 to support business case
development. We see this as a critical element in our
strategy to improve the customer offer.
§ Ask T2 is related to developing a more attractive young
person’s ticket product. Our initial work has suggested
an improved York young person’s ticket would comprise five
elements:
o
A development of the existging
ITSO young persons’ travel card in York for use alongside the
tap-on-tap-off fares set out above
o
An agreement between operators
as to the age of eligibility – ideally 19
o
Extension of the current fare
structure used on park and ride, whereby up to 3 young people can
travel at no extra cost with a fare paying adult, across the whole
network
o
Development of a young
persons’ low flat fare (for example of 50p per trip) which
would be available alongside tap on tap off so that the daily cost
of travel is capped
o
Development of an annual/
termly pass for younger people
§ We appreciate that it will be necessary to
provide pump prime funding for a concession of this nature.
We request funding of £5,000,000 to deliver this concession
for a three year period in York. After this period we would
look to provide this concession either on a commercial basis or (if
available) with further DfT funding. This is an important
part of our strategy to improve the customer offer, and will
also reduce social exclusion by improving young peoples’
access to education and training.
7
Bus Network
Coverage
7.1
69% of respondents to the Local
Transport Plan consultation said that a more extensive bus network
would lead to them making more use of York’s bus
services.
7.2
This poses a particular
challenge at the moment, as the network has not yet stabilised
following the pandemic. Particular pressures are:
§ Passengers have not yet returned to bus
services at their pre-covid volumes, and it is not clear what
patronage would look like once a mature state has been achieved, or
what support might be needed in the medium term to provide the
“pre-covid” network
§ In the short to medium term driver
shortages mean that it is extremely challenging to provide the
levels of service which were available before the pandemic.
In York, at the time of writing, a number of services are operating
at a reduced frequency because of driver shortages
§ Local authorities are experiencing
exceptional cost pressures, which force them to consider provision
of non-statutory services, such as supported buses, in an
environment when there may be cuts in other areas
§ Whislt the National Bus Strategy and BSIP
process offer the opportunity for finance for the next 3 years to
support additional services, it is nto clear what finance may be
available in the longer term, given that additional bus services
tend to require ongoing support, even on a reducing support
profile.
Transport needs in York
7.3
Accordingly, analysis
undertaken in a bus network review for York (Evidence Base)
illustrated a number of issues with network coverage in the city,
which are as follows:
§ Despite generally good coverage and
reasonably high service frequencies, there are some area of the
city which suffer from poorer access to services, and some periods
when services do not operate – particularly Sundays and
evenings in some areas
§ Service levels can be inconsistent, with
routes operating on a range of frequencies – for example,
every 7.5, 10, 12, 15 and 30 minutes, with some services not
operating at clockface intervals – something which is
confusing for passengers
§ Many of York’s “regular”
services start their “regular” frequency service
relatively late in the day and finish relatively early. Some
services have reduced frequencies in the middle of the day to
accommodate driver breaks.
§ There are also some areas of York which ,
whilst they see frequent bus services, suffer from slow journey
times to the city centre because the provided routes are
indirect.
7.4
This analysis was undertaken on
York’s pre-covid network. It should be pointed out that
the network which is currently operating – on a temporary
basis driven by driver shortages – has further shortcomings,
such as lower frequency services on many key routes.
Our
target
7.5
Our target is to provide a
commercially viable regular, dependable service to as much of the
city as possible, free of public funding after the initial 3 year
pump prime period, comprising:
§ A 10 minute (or better) frequency of
service between 7AM and 7PM Monday to Friday on the main routes in
the city, including the park and ride network, with services every
30 minutes in the evening and on Sundays
§ A 30 minute frequency of service between
7AM and 7PM on the other urban routes in York with services every
hour in the evenings and on Sundays
§ Improved services to other destinations,
dependent on what is affordable once the frequency enhancements set
out above have been delivered.
7.6
Although much of the network
already operates at our near to these standards, pump priming
funding would be required to deliver a network to this
standard. We have assumed this falling to zero on a three
year profile.
7.7
A particular concern is
York’s 59 park and ride service. This was provided from
a park and ride site on the A59 at Poppleton, which approaches York
from the north west and is the road linking York with
Harrogate. The site has, however, been used for covid testing
since April 2020, with use as this projected until at least April
2022, and it is reasonable to conclude that it cannot be bought
back into use without significant pump priming funding to rebuild
the market it has lost whilst being out of use for (at least) two
years. Nonetheless, in the medium to long term this park and
ride service is essential to serving the York Central
development. The site has also recently received a solar
canopy feeding an EV hyperhub and is operated using electric
buses.
7.8
Consequently, Ask BN1 is
for a £3,000,000 fund which can be used to enhance
York’s bus network. This will be deployed on a mixture
of measures including pump prime funding for the return of the
Poppleton Bar park and ride service, frequency enhancements to
provide a “true” 10/ 30 minute frequency service on
routes in the city and, if affordable after the pump-prime
projects, enhancements to increase areas served by York’s bus
service. However, as stated above, it is difficult to judge
the scope for this until the network has reached a mature state
after the recovery from the pandemic. This Ask relates to
all four of the categories of support: Bus Recovery from covid and
its consequences; Stabilisation of the network in the medium term;
reducing social exclusion and Improving the offer for
customers.
7.9
Critical to the deployment of
these funds will be a clear monitoring and evaluation framework
which will be used to assess how this funding can be used to
greatest effect/ best value across the network.
Services
in the central area of York
7.10
York city centre has a large
pedestrianised area which is, for the safety of residents and
vistors, only accessible on foot during the majority of the day.
The Council are considering the expansion of the footstreets
and opportunities to increase non-car based accessibility to its
boundaries in particular for citizens with restricted mobility.
Notwithstanding the expansion of footstreets proceeding or not, the
2022 BSIP and emerging Local Transport Plan will need to consider
commercially viable options for this challenge. Ask C1
is for funding to explore and model with operators commercially
viable options for citizens with restricted mobility to alight
closer to footstreets than currently available by the Bus Network.
Consequently, we request £50,000 to bring forward and
outline business case for BSIP 2022 and LTP4 as to commercial
trials. If a service is delivered this measure will
improve the offer to customers.
8
Information for
passengers
Introduction
8.1
Effective and easily readable
information on bus services is critical to making them easy to use
– both for regular users and first time users. We
have worked hard with the QBP to ensure that every bus stop in York
has comprehensive all-route information, with all timetables
including route maps for the services stopping there. 87% of
users in Transport Focus’s 2019 surveys rated the information
provided at bus stops in York positively.
The
current situation
8.2
Through the Local Sustainable
Transport Fund and Better Bus Area Fund programmes, bus information
in York was transformed in 2014/15 from some of the worst in the
UK, to being some of the best (Figures 8.1 and 8.2). The
improvements have included:
§ Easy to read, stop specific timetables,
showing all operator’s services together
§ Route diagrams showing where each service
goes
§ In the city centre, maps to show
interchange opportunities
§ The itravel York website and journey
planner
§ Revisions and improvements to the York bus
route map.
8.3
To support the new timetables
we agreed six service change dates each year with York’s bus
operators. This makes it easier for users to remember
timetables and be confident services have a degree of
stability.
Figure 8.1: On
street information in 2012
and…
Figure 8.2: …in
2014
8.4
More recently, the many changes
to services as a result of covid have proved to be a challenge to
providing this quality of information and York, like many
authorities, has not been able to provide roadside display
information to the quality it desires since March 2020.
However, we are now beginning to restart provision of this
information – hence Commitment I1 will see the return
of composite timetables featuring route maps and services from all
operators will return to all of York’s bus stops as soon as
is practicable. We will also seek to move back to a maximum
of four service change dates a year.
8.5
City of York Council has also
installed approximately 100 on-street real time information screens
(figure 9.3) which give bus times according to their position on
the road network, as registered by GPS equipment on each bus.
The real time screens are concentrated in the city centre, at the
district centres, such as Acomb and Haxby, and at heavily used
stops out of the city centre, including York District Hospital,
York St John University, the University of York, York College and
the park and ride terminals.
8.6
The council has fitted all bus
stops in York with QR codes and Near Field Communications (NFC)
chips and coils to make it easy for phone users to access real time
information for each stop.
Figure 8.3: Real time screen
8.7
The council also provides a
range of bus information and journey travel services through the
www.itravelyork.info
website.
8.8
Pre-covid, the council
maintained, through Better Bus Area funding, an enquiry desk in the
Travel Centre of the Railway Station which offered a range of bus
timetables, sold period bus tickets (including tickets for National
Express) and can assisted with enquiries. Use of this
facility was approximately 2,000 enquiries per month.
Unfortunately, this facility was lost during covid and a subsequent
refit of York Station’s Travel Centre. However, the
improvements at York station offer the opportunity to reinstate the
enquiry desk within the new bus interchange at the front of the
Station.
8.9
Bus operators produce their own
paper timetables. These will continue to be distributed via
libraries, the Bus Enquiry Desk at the Railway Station, the Tourist
Information Office and a host of other outlets.
Target
8.10
Our target is to continue with
our current activity, but expand it by:
§ Reproviding the Inquiry Desk for bus
passengers at the Railway Station
§ Expand and improve our real time
estate
§ Provide audio-visual announcements on
buses in York which don’t currently have them
8.11
Commitment
I2:bus operators
will continue to produce their own timetable leaflets and publicise
their services on their websites and via third party
apps.
8.12
Commitment
I3:City of York
Council will maintain the www.itravelyork.info
website and its journey planner.
8.13
Commitment
I4:City of York
Council will maintain the on-street real time information
screens.
8.14
Commitment
I5:the Bus Enquiry
Desk at York Station will be reopened as part of the Station
Frontage project. However, we are making a capital Ask
(I1) of £100k towards providing this facility. This is
to assist the network’s recovery from the
pandemic.
Audio-visual announcements
8.15
Audio-visual announcements are
very valued by people with impaired vision and visitors to York,
who use them to help navigate around the city. Consultation
with bus users revelaed that provision of AV announcements was one
of their top 5 priorities for improving York’s bus
network. Commitment I6 is that City of York Council
will work with bus operators to encourage provision of audio-visual
announcements on buses and at bus stops. Ask I2 is for
£200,000 to provide AV equipment on the 100 buses in York
which are not currently equipped. This is to improve the
customer offer and reduce social exclusion.
8.16
Ask I3 is for
£800,000 to
double the number of real time screens in York through purchase of
100 battery powered screens for use in suburban and rural
locations, where bus services tend to operate at lower frequencies
and real time information is particularly valued. This
will improve the customer offer.
8.17
We are also aware that much of
our existing real time estate is ageing, having been installed
between 2008 and 2015, and that by the end of the funding period
for this BSIP some of the equipment will be life expired.
Consequently Ask I4 is for £500,000 to replace real time
equipment we expect to become life expired before 2024/5.
This will help the network stabilise in the medium
term.
9
Stops and shelters
Current
situation
9.1
There are approximately 1,100
bus stops across York, around 300 of which have a passenger
shelter. Through York’s Better Bus Area programme the
vast majority of stops in York, and all the stops on more frequent
routes, were refurbished and CYC currently has a fund of
£100,000 per year which is used to replace/ refurbish tired
and life-expired stops and shelters across the network.
Effective management of this programme has resulted in 93% of
York’s bus passengers being satisfied with the state of their
bus stop in Transport Focus’s 2019 survey. Some bus
shelters in the city centre are provided through an advertising
agreement with JC deCaux. This expires in 2024, and we will
look to use the replacement contract as a way to achieve the best
uplift in the bus stop/ shelter stock in York.
9.2
In the city there is a clear
hierarchy of bus stops, ranging from stops which are currently
disused or used only by home to school bus services, through to the
interchanges in the city centre. Table 9.1 (overleaf) shows
what CYC will aspire to provide at stops at each level.
Target
9.3
Our target is to improve our
bus stops and shelters to support our objective of making the
network as inclusive as possible. Feedback from York Bus
Forum has highlighted the important role of providing shelters,
places to sit and Kassle kerbs to promote easy boarding and
alighting at stops, including when wheelchair ramps are
used.
Action
Plan
9.4
The bus stops are also the
“shop window” for the network. Hence, their
upkeep is important. Commitment S1 is that City of
York Council will use best endeavours to maintain bus stops in the
city. All shelters are cleaned every quarter – or every
month in the city centre and we will continue to do this.
Stops without a shelter are serviced annually and on timetable
change dates.
9.5
We also wish to upgrade our bus
stops and shelters with a programme to provide as many as possible
with a bench, kassle kerb, hard standing and lighting to make them
easy to use by people with a range of mobility and sensory
impariments, and to improve personal security at stops –
particularly shelter which are not lit. Consequently we are
asking (Ask S1) the DfT to match the £100k per
year CYC is already investing in improving bus stops across
York. We will develop a programme alongside bus user groups
– indeed are already doing this with the York Bus
Forum. This will reduce social exclusion and improve the
offer to customers.